Jose-Manuel Aburto
José Manuel Aburto
The Leverhulme Center for Demographic Science
José Manuel Aburto is a Mexican demographer in the Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science and the Department of Sociology. He joined Oxford to hold the Newton International and Marie Skłodowska-Curie fellowships. He received his MA in Demography at El Colegio de México, and PhD in Demography at the University of Southern Denmark and Germany’s Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research in 2020.
The overarching aim of his research is to produce novel insights on population health inequalities and better understand the link between health inequalities and social determinants of health through core demographic concepts. Theoretically and methodologically, his work follows two main strands. First, he develops and advances formal demographic techniques to measure inequalities in the length of life, and uses this perspective to generate new ways of analysing population health. Second, through these and other methodological tools, he examines the structural and social determinants of population health inequalities. His work so far has examined how structural shocks like violence, and more recently the COVID-19 pandemic, affect population health inequalities around the globe.
Recent publications
Life Expectancy Loss and Recovery by Age and Sex Following Catastrophic Events in Europe during the 19th and 20th Centuries
Journal article
Silva E. and Aburto JM., (2025), CANADIAN STUDIES IN POPULATION, 52
Indirect effects of the COVID-19 pandemic: A cause-of-death analysis of life expectancy changes in 24 countries, 2015 to 2022
Journal article
Polizzi A. et al, (2024), PNAS Nexus, 4
The lifetime risk of maternal near miss morbidity in Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and Latin America: a cross-country systematic analysis
Journal article
Gazeley U. et al, (2024), The Lancet Global Health, 12, e1775 - e1784
The reciprocal relation between rising longevity and temperature-related mortality risk in older people, Spain 1980-2018.
Journal article
Lloyd SJ. et al, (2024), Environment international, 193
How lifespan and life years lost equate to unity
Journal article
Baudisch A. and Aburto JM., (2024), DEMOGRAPHIC RESEARCH, 50